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Climate Projections and IPCC Confidence

Environmental Science
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Climate Projections and IPCC Confidence

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Climate Change Projections and IPCC Confidence Ratings

Climate projections use models to estimate how climate will change under different emissions scenarios. Understanding how projections are developed, how they are tested, and how confident scientists are in their predictions is a core skill in VCE Environmental Science.

What Are Climate Models?

General Circulation Models (GCMs) — also called Earth System Models (ESMs) — are complex computer programs that:
- Simulate the atmosphere, ocean, land surface and sea ice as interacting systems
- Represent physical, chemical and biological processes
- Divide Earth into a 3D grid and calculate conditions at each grid point over time
- Run forward from an initial state to project future conditions under different emissions scenarios

Modern climate models typically operate at ~50–200 km horizontal resolution for the atmosphere and 1° for the ocean.

Testing Models Against Observations

Climate models are validated by comparing their simulated output against observed historical records:

  • If a model accurately reproduces the observed warming trend of the 20th century, the seasonal temperature cycle, major El Niño events and volcanic cooling, it has higher credibility for future projections
  • Model ensembles: Many different models (20–50 models run by different institutions) are compared; their spread provides an estimate of projection uncertainty
  • Temperature reconstructions (ice cores, tree rings) are compared against model simulations of past climates to verify the models

Key validation result (IPCC AR6): Multiple independent climate models reproduce observed global temperature increase when human GHG forcing is included. Natural factors alone (solar, volcanic) cannot explain the observed warming trend since ~1950.

Emissions Scenarios

Projections depend on future emissions trajectories, quantified as Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs):

Scenario Description Projected Warming by 2100
SSP1-1.9 Aggressive mitigation; net zero by ~2050 ~1.5°C
SSP2-4.5 Intermediate; some mitigation ~2.0–3.5°C
SSP3-7.0 High emissions; limited mitigation ~2.8–4.6°C
SSP5-8.5 Very high emissions; no mitigation ~3.3–5.7°C

The range of outcomes underscores why emissions reduction decisions matter now.

IPCC Confidence Ratings

The IPCC uses a structured framework for expressing the degree of confidence in its findings, based on:
- Strength of the evidence (quantity, quality and consistency of studies)
- Degree of agreement among scientists

Confidence Levels

Level Description
Very high confidence ~9 in 10 chance of being correct
High confidence ~8 in 10 chance
Medium confidence ~5 in 10 chance
Low confidence ~2 in 10 chance
Very low confidence ~1 in 10 chance

How Confidence Varies by Scale

Projection Confidence Level Reason
Global average temperature will increase Very high Multiple lines of evidence; well-understood physics
Sea level will continue to rise Very high Direct measurements; physical understanding
Heatwaves will be more frequent High Observed trend consistent with models
Changes to global average rainfall patterns High Physics well understood
Regional rainfall changes (e.g. southern Australia drying) Medium Greater model uncertainty at regional scale
Changes to individual extreme events Medium–low Many interacting factors; short observational records
Rates of sea level rise > 2 m by 2100 Low Ice sheet dynamics poorly constrained

Key principle: Confidence is higher for larger spatial scales and more direct physical relationships. Projecting specific changes to a small region’s rainfall is more uncertain than projecting global temperature trends.

Australian Regional Projections

For Australia (from CSIRO Climate Change in Australia, 2015 update):
- Very high confidence: Further warming; more hot days; sea level rise; ocean acidification
- High confidence: More intense extreme rainfall; more severe fire weather in south
- Medium confidence: Reduced rainfall in southern Australia (already observed trend continuing); changes to tropical cyclone intensity
- Lower confidence: Exact rainfall changes in northern Australia

VCAA FOCUS: VCAA may ask you to explain what an IPCC confidence rating means and how it is determined. Always link confidence to the strength and agreement of evidence, not just to ‘how sure scientists are’. Regional projections always have lower confidence than global projections — explain why (natural variability, model resolution, fewer observational records).

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